Smith Kungwankiattichai, Amrita Desai, Shelby Koppinger, Richard T Maziarz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Immunotherapy has become central to cancer care, whether in combination with traditional chemotherapy, as adjuvant therapy, or as primary therapy, and has been demonstrated to be central to treatment of newly diagnosed or relapsed disease in multiple randomized control trials. Antibody-based immunotherapy initiated the treatment revolution, but now immune effector cellular therapy is rapidly emerging and expanding its indications. Efficacy determinations have led to multiple international regulatory approvals, but unique significant toxicities have also been identified. It remains critical to understand risk factors that predict for adverse events that are encountered after administration of cancer immunotherapy. Similarly, identification of patient-related factors that enhance or diminish therapeutic efficacy, independent of the underlying malignancy, is critical for balancing the benefit and risk of immunotherapy. This review addresses the multiple new cellular therapy initiatives and addresses the importance of appropriate patient selection that will ultimately maximize the treatment benefit.
期刊介绍:
Med is a flagship medical journal published monthly by Cell Press, the global publisher of trusted and authoritative science journals including Cell, Cancer Cell, and Cell Reports Medicine. Our mission is to advance clinical research and practice by providing a communication forum for the publication of clinical trial results, innovative observations from longitudinal cohorts, and pioneering discoveries about disease mechanisms. The journal also encourages thought-leadership discussions among biomedical researchers, physicians, and other health scientists and stakeholders. Our goal is to improve health worldwide sustainably and ethically.
Med publishes rigorously vetted original research and cutting-edge review and perspective articles on critical health issues globally and regionally. Our research section covers clinical case reports, first-in-human studies, large-scale clinical trials, population-based studies, as well as translational research work with the potential to change the course of medical research and improve clinical practice.